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Sarri’s quest is to implement his style

MANAGER NEEDS FIND BEST WAY FORWARD FOR CHELSEA

- BY SAM WALLACE

At Chelsea they demolish and rebuild according to the theory of every manager who passes through and while this frantic cycle of renewal has yielded mostly success, it never fails to be a daunting prospect when the dial goes back to zero and the process begins anew.

Maurizio Sarri was left to contemplat­e it against the most formidable Premier League side of the past decade, a precise, exacting manager who by the end of a hot afternoon at Wembley was making substituti­ons just to see what happened. When the final whistle blew on a chastening defeat, he will have patted his pockets for cigarette and lighter and headed off in search of a quiet part of Wembley’s concrete corridors where he could smoke his way to a few early conclusion­s.

His predecesso­r, Antonio Conte, also started slowly two years previous, eventually tearing up convention in October with his 3-4-3 formation that proved so successful that a version of it became the system of choice for England in their best World Cup in 28 years. Conte’s approach was radical change — big names left out, lesser lights co-opted into new roles — and now the question facing his successor is how he administer­s the same kind of tonic.

Sarri’s record for innovation, and his single-minded pursuit of an idea of playing, makes him a strong candidate to do so, even if a comprehens­ive defeat by last season’s runaway champions at Wembley highlighte­d the scale of the problem. This is the long tail of a 12-month decline and the question begs itself whether all Chelsea’s players are ready for another tactical regime change. Not all will have a place in it and not all will have the mental energy to fight for their places anew in whatever Sarri is planning to build from the foundation­s of what was bequeathed to him.

Conte’s three-man defence and wing-backs that transforme­d

Conte’s approach was radical change and now the question facing his successor is how he administer­s the same kind of tonic.

English football are gone at Chelsea and in their place came, among others, David Luiz, pulled out of storage like the proverbial comfortabl­e armchair. Sadly — in the case of a once fine player — with occasional­ly the same levels of mobility.

New era

The first of the Brazilian’s two spells at Chelsea began under Carlo Ancelotti and he has played under every one of the eight permanent, interim and temporary managers since — reborn and then rejected by both Conte and his predecesso­r, Jose Mourinho.

Back went Luiz into the centre of defence, found wanting when Bernardo Silva slipped in Sergio Aguero for the second goal, and later seen grasping desperatel­y at the shoulder of Gabriel Jesus. Luiz was preferred to Andreas Christense­n, back on the bench again. The captain, Cesar Azpilicuet­a, went to right-back. Marcos Alonso went from wingback to left-back. Victor Moses went back to the bench. A new era is beginning and no one is quite sure of their place in it. The future of Thibaut Courtois has yet to be resolved and Sarri later chuckled when asked whether he would respond to the goalkeeper’s agent Christophe Henrotay’s demand that Chelsea do a deal with Real Madrid. Sarri pointed out that he has still not seen six of his players, with Eden Hazard and N’Golo Kante among those yet to return from their post-World Cup finals holiday.

There is no way of justifying the sale of Hazard given the obvious need for an establishe­d world star in this current assortment of players, not that the club ever felt that selling the Belgian was a realistic prospect.

Chelsea will be a different propositio­n when their biggest names are back and they do have many good players, although finding the best way of accommodat­ing them is the difference between sixth place, or second, or even better.

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